Saturday, October 21, 2006

Tampines Bus Interchange, 7 p.m.

This is a poem which I have posted very earlier on in my blog. I made some minor revisions and repost it. (yes, ran out of ideas again)

The photo is not a shot of the Tampines terminus. Probably taken in the early sixties in Singapore, at Outram Park. The present Tampines interchange is nothing like this. It's a busy, bustling place, with crowds, shopping malls and a train station.

For all those foreign friends who are wondering what is an "interchange", think of it as a converging point where all trunk route buses are terminated, and the passengers are dropped off to take connecting rides on "feeder" buses to their homes in the town. Sounds efficient, but to us communters it does cost more, haha.

(image enhanced by dsnake1), author of photo unknown

Tampines Bus Interchange, 7 p.m.

Off the #10 busthe driver thoughthe was transportingperishablesinstead of passengersthe aircon was THAT cold

of course my lenses fogged up like an atlantic mist as i walked into a wall of incessant chatter pneumatic drills yammering away on roadworks that lasts forever

They call it a bus station in some other countries. :) I saw one in Washington, it was rather bare bones compared to ours. Not much of sheltering and it wasn't quite clear where the different buses go. The rides were more expensive, the service is not so regular (they come at scheduled times but sometimes they don't come at all, according to a local), the routes aren't as extensive and the bus is smaller by half. Well, most people drive their own cars to get around anyway.

I remember this poem posted earlier. The scene is the same at all other bus interchanges -- now that you've mentioned it, I do notice there IS always a KFC just around a corner. :D

I like this and the haiku, I wished the things that are dirty, soiled could be washed by the moonlight, the reality is that I have to wash them myself, unless of course if you are using disposables......lovely, always happy to be visiting you...ps was the one on Tampines published anywhere, sounds vaguely familiar

Yeah, in DC. But generally, overseas bus drivers tend to be friendlier.

The major complaint I have about our buses here is the cleanliness. I have sat on ones that have cockroaches crawling around between the seats. Or mosquitos. Or something smells like there's mold in the air con.

Some air con buses get leaky when it rains, and the upper deck literally floods because of the drainage inefficiency -- water sloshing back and forth under your feet.

I love this one. Very well told, can almost feel the claustrophobia creeping in! I have been stuck in a bus before, sitting on the inside part of the double seats and a roach strolled jauntily in front of me. Worse part is I couldnt escape cos the bus was so packed. could only continue being stuck in my seat and pray the roach doesnt decide to have any friendly intentions and approach nearer.

The newer buses ARE cleaner, and the drivers spiffier and polite too! The driver plying my street is very friendly and waits for slower passengers to run up to the bus; he's such a nice young man he makes taking the bus an almost joyful experience..kekeke!!! My husband commented just the other day that bus drivers nowadays look very executive-like with their long-sleeved shirts and sitting on their cushy big driver seats. I think it's good to elevate the image and salaries, the driver uncles of yesteryears are mostly so...disgruntled ah peks and ah bengs; you never know if you're gonna survive thru some bus-trips from hell!